Key Issue 2: Why Do Religions Have Different
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Transcript Key Issue 2: Why Do Religions Have Different
Key Issue 2:
Why Do Religions Have
Different Distributions?
Each can be traced to a man who lived
since the start of recorded history
◦ Buddhism
- Christianity
- Islam
Origin of Universalizing
Religions
Jesus
The four Gospels of the Christian Bible
◦
◦
◦
◦
Matthew
Mark
Luke
John
Origin of Christianity
Accept the teachings of the Bible as well
as the authority of the Church hierarchy
(the Pope)
7 sacraments: Baptism, Confirmation,
Penance, Anointing the Sick, Matrimony,
Holy Orders, and the Eucharist)
transubstantiation
Roman Catholics
Split from the Roman Catholic Church
Patriarch of Constantinople
Accept the 7 Sacraments, but reject
doctrines added by the Roman Catholics
after the 8th Century
Eastern Orthodoxy
Capernaum
St. Basil’s Cathedral, Moscow
The Reformation
Martin Luther’s 95 Theses
Individuals directly communicate with
God…don’t have to go through a
priest/Pope
Protestantism
Origin: similar narrative to Judaism and
Christianity; Adam – Abraham
Hagar and Ishmael
◦ Second wife and son
◦ Banished
◦ Makkah/Mecca
Origin of Islam
Born about A.D. 570
The visions
Arabic and the Quran
The Hijra
Sunni and Shiite
Muslims
Muhammad
Siddhartha Gautama
◦ Born a prince in 563 B.C. in present day Nepal
◦ The Buddha,
“the Enlightened One”
◦ Spread the message in India
Origin of Buddhism
No specific founder
Existed prior to recorded history
Invasion of the Aryan tribes from Central
Asia into India (1400 B.C.)
◦ Religion mixed with the Dravidians (who
already lived there)
◦ This became Hinduism
Origin of Hinduism
Diffusion of Religions
Christianity diffused through all forms of
diffusion:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Relocation Diffusion
Contagious Diffusion
Hierarchical in the 4th Century
Since the year 1500, missionary activity by
Europeans extended Christianity to other
regions of the world
Diffusion of Christianity
Hierarchical diffusion: Muslim armies
Relocation: missionaries to sub-Saharan
Africa and Southeast Asia
Diffusion of Islam
Most have limited diffusion
They lack missionaries to go out and try
to convert
Mingling of Ethnic and Universalizing
Religions:
◦ Africa: in some places Christianity is mixed
with the traditional religion
◦ Japan: Buddhism is mixed with Shintoism
Lack of Diffusion of Ethnic
Religions
Judaism is practiced in many countries
Diaspora
Ghettos
Following the Holocaust
•
Judaism: An Exception
Ethnic Religion’s holy places derive from
the distinctive physical environment of
their hearths
Universalizing Religions endow with
holiness cities and places associated with
their founders’ lives.
Holy Places
Eight locations of important events in
Buddha’s life
◦ Example: Bodh Gaya, where he reached
enlightenment
Buddhist Shrines
Holiest places: cities associated with
Muhammad
1. Makkah:
- the Ka’ba
- The Hajj
2. Medina
Holy Places in Islam
The
Darbar
Sahib, or
Golden
Temple
Holy Places in Sikhism
Closely tied to the physical geography in
India
Natural features rank as holy: river banks
or coastlines
A tirtha
The Ganges
Holy Places in Hinduism
Cosmogony: a set of religious beliefs
concerning the origin of the universe
Yin (earth, darkness, female, etc.)
Yang (heaven, light, male, etc.)
Cosmogony in Ethnic Religions
A prominent feature is the celebration of
the seasons
The Jewish Calendar
◦ agricultural
◦ Lunar calendar
The Solstice
◦ Pagan religions
◦ Stonehenge
The Calendar in Ethnic
Religions
Holidays: commemorate events in the
founder’s life
Climate and agricultural cycle are not
central to the liturgy and rituals
The Calendar in Universalizing
Religions
So………
Why do different religions
have different distributions?